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إشارات
على هجمة سُنية جديدة في العالم بقلم:
روبرت باير مجلة
التايم الامريكية - 2/3/2007 Signs
of a New Sunni Offensive Friday,
Mar. 02, 2007 By ROBERT BAER This
week's bomb attack on Vice President Cheney in
Afghanistan and the murder of four Frenchmen in Saudi
Arabia are harbingers of a new "Sunni
offensive" — likely to unfold in Afghanistan,
Iraq and maybe Lebanon. And, while there's no hard
evidence for it, we shouldn't be surprised if
Qaeda-affiliated groups try to take the offensive to
Europe and the United States. The
term "Sunni offensive" is of course
misleading. There is no Sunni army, Sunni general or
Sunni battle plan, though Bin Laden may wish there were.
But neither he nor any other Sunni Muslim has day-to-day
control over the faithful. In fact, Bin Laden's recent
call to sabotage world oil facilities to punish the
United States has gone so far unheeded. But
that does not mean a "Sunni offensive" is any
less of a threat. Militant Sunni strength lies in
believers' uncompromising conviction that they are
divinely bound to fight in the Jihad and either succeed
or die in ending the "foreign occupation" of
Muslim lands. They believe the Koran is unequivocal
about this; they accept no other legal authority. With
that kind of conviction, militant Sunnis don't need a
general, an army or a battle plan. Another
strength militant Sunnis have is paranoia. They do not
believe we invaded Iraq to strip Saddam of WMD, but
rather to destroy a Sunni regime. Why else would we put
in his place a Shi'a government that has to hide behind
American troops in the Green Zone? Or build a permanent
base? Never mind that militant Sunnis miss every nuance
of American policy there is to miss. That's what they
believe, and it's what's driving them to launch an
offensive. It's
pretty much the same thing in Afghanistan. The Taliban
reduce the world to the belief that NATO invaded not to
kill or capture Osama bin Laden but rather to destroy a
believing, Sunni Muslim regime. If NATO's real mission
were to punish bin Laden for 9/11, why is he not dead or
behind bars? Or as one CIA officer put it to me,
"It does defy anyone's comprehension how we lost
the world's tallest Arab in a moonscape." The
murder of four Frenchmen this week underscores the depth
of Sunni paranoia we're facing today. I'm told armed
Salafi militants have organized themselves in and around
the two holy cities of Mecca and Medina to protect those
cities from imminent occupation, presumably by the West.
They apparently took the French for an advance force. The
militant Sunnis would prefer to call whatever their
planning a counter-offensive. In any case, as long as we
are in Iraq and Afghanistan, fighting and killing
Sunnis, Sunnis will remain convinced their existence is
at stake. Many will decide they have no choice but to
enlist in the jihad, including martyring themselves in
another 9/11. http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1595405,00.html ----------------- نشرنا
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